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Argentina takes down Columbus statue from pedestal

The Associated Press

Posted:
06/29/2013 05:55:44 PM MDT

Updated:
06/29/2013 09:40:39 PM MDT

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The monument of Christopher Columbus, located behind the government house, hangs from a crane as it is removed by order of the national government in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, June 29, 2013. The city government of Buenos Aires appealed to the courts to prevent the removal of the monument, which Italy donated to Argentina in 1910 on the 100th anniversary of the May Revolution.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina—Workers in Argentina's capital have taken down a controversial statue of Christopher Columbus for restoration.

The engineer in charge of the operation, Juan Arriegue, says the 38-ton, 6-meter-high (20-foot-high) statue of the Italian explorer was lifted using cranes and will be stored beneath its pedestal behind the Government House.

Arriegue told the newspaper La Nacion that the statue "will not be moved to another location, we are only going to submit it to a restoration process."

The statue has become a political flashpoint between the leftist government of President Cristina Fernandez and conservative Buenos Aires Mayor Mauricio Macri.

Fernandez's government sought to have the statue moved and replaced by a statue of guerrilla leader Juana Azurduy donated by Bolivia.

But both Argentina's Italian community and officials in Buenos Aires said the statue belonged to the city not the federal government.

A court issued an injunction temporarily blocking its transfer to another location.